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This volume is an outgrowth of the Conference on Research on the
Enacted Mathematics Curriculum, funded by the National Science
Foundation and held in Tampa, Florida in November 2010. The volume
has the potential to be useful to a range of researchers, from
established veterans in curriculum research to new researchers in
this area of mathematics education. The chapters can be used to
generate conversation about researching the enacted mathematics
curriculum, including similarities and differences in the variables
that can and should be studied across various curricula. As such,
it might be used by a curriculum project team as it outlines a
research agenda for curriculum or program evaluation. It might also
be used as a text in a university graduate course on curriculum
research and design. The chapters in this volume are a natural
complement to those in Approaches to Studying the Enacted
Mathematics Curriculum (Heck, Chval, Weiss, & Ziebarth, 2012),
also published by Information Age Publishing. While the present
volume focuses on a range of issues related to researching the
enacted mathematics curriculum, including theoretical and
conceptual issues, the volume by Heck et al. provides insights into
different instrumentations used by groups of researchers to study
curriculum enactment.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, University of Mississippi This monograph reports on
an analysis of a small part of the mathematics curriculum, the
definitions given to quadrilaterals. This kind of research, which
we call micro-curricular analysis, is often undertaken by those who
create curriculum, but it is not usually done systematically and it
is rarely published. Many terms in mathematics education can be
found to have different definitions in mathematics books. Among
these are ""natural number,"" ""parallel lines"" and ""congruent
triangles,"" ""trapezoid"" and ""isosceles trapezoid,"" the formal
definitions of the trigonometric functions and absolute value, and
implicit definitions of the arithmetic operations addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and division. Yet many teachers and
students do not realize there is a choice of definitions for
mathematical terms. And even those who realize there is a choice
may not know who decides which definition of any mathematical term
is better, and under what criteria. Finally, rarely are the
mathematical implications of various choices discussed.As a result,
many students misuse and otherwise do not understand the role of
definition in mathematics. We have chosen in this monograph to
examine a bit of mathematics for its definitions: the
quadrilaterals. We do so because there is some disagreement in the
definitions and, consequently, in the ways in which quadrilaterals
are classified and relate to each other. The issues underlying
these differences have engaged students, teachers, mathematics
educators, and mathematicians. There have been several articles and
a number of essays on the definitions and classification of
quadrilaterals. But primarily we chose this specific area of
definition in mathematics because it demonstrates how broad
mathematical issues revolving around definitions become reflected
in curricular materials. While we were undertaking this research,
we found that the area of quadrilaterals supplied grist for broader
and richer discussions than we had first anticipated. The intended
audience includes curriculum developers, researchers, teachers,
teacher trainers, and anyone interested in language and its use.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, University of Mississippi This volume contains the
proceedings of the First International Curriculum Conference
sponsored by the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum
(CSMC). The CSMC is one of the National Science Foundation Centers
for Learning and Teaching (Award No. ESI-0333879). The
countries-China, Japan, Korea, and Singapore (in alphabetical
order, which also happens to be the order of their
populations)-have each been in the news because of their
performance on international tests and/or their economic
performance and potential. They also have centralized education
ministries that create a single mathematics curriculum framework
followed in the entire country.
The mathematics curriculum - what mathematics is taught, to whom it
is taught, and when it is taught - is the bedrock to understanding
what mathematics students can, could, and should learn. Today's
digital technology influences the mathematics curriculum in two
quite different ways. One influence is on the delivery of
mathematics through hardware such as desktops, laptops, and
tablets. Another influence is on the doing of mathematics using
software available on this hardware, but also available on the
internet, calculators, or smart phones. These developments, rapidly
increasing in their availability and decreasing in their cost,
raise fundamental questions regarding a mathematics curriculum that
has traditionally been focused on paper-and-pencil work and taught
in many places as a set of rules to be practiced and learned. This
volume presents the talks given at a conference held in 2014 at the
University of Chicago, sponsored by the Center for the Study of
Mathematics Curriculum. The speakers - experts from around the
world and inside the USA - were asked to discuss one or more of the
following topics: changes in the nature and creation of curricular
materials available to students transformations in how students
learn and how they demonstrate their learning rethinking the role
of the teacher and how students and teachers interact within a
classroom and across distances from each other The result is a set
of articles that are interesting and captivating, and challenge us
to examine how the learning of mathematics can and should be
affected by today's technology.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, Iowa State University This volume contains papers
from the Second International Curriculum Conference sponsored by
the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum (CSMC). The
intended audience includes policy makers, curriculum developers,
researchers, teachers, teacher trainers, and anyone else interested
in school mathematics curricula.
The mathematics curriculum - what mathematics is taught, to whom it
is taught, and when it is taught - is the bedrock to understanding
what mathematics students can, could, and should learn. Today's
digital technology influences the mathematics curriculum in two
quite different ways. One influence is on the delivery of
mathematics through hardware such as desktops, laptops, and
tablets. Another influence is on the doing of mathematics using
software available on this hardware, but also available on the
internet, calculators, or smart phones. These developments, rapidly
increasing in their availability and decreasing in their cost,
raise fundamental questions regarding a mathematics curriculum that
has traditionally been focused on paper-and-pencil work and taught
in many places as a set of rules to be practiced and learned. This
volume presents the talks given at a conference held in 2014 at the
University of Chicago, sponsored by the Center for the Study of
Mathematics Curriculum. The speakers - experts from around the
world and inside the USA - were asked to discuss one or more of the
following topics: changes in the nature and creation of curricular
materials available to students transformations in how students
learn and how they demonstrate their learning rethinking the role
of the teacher and how students and teachers interact within a
classroom and across distances from each other The result is a set
of articles that are interesting and captivating, and challenge us
to examine how the learning of mathematics can and should be
affected by today's technology.
This volume is an outgrowth of the Conference on Research on the
Enacted Mathematics Curriculum, funded by the National Science
Foundation and held in Tampa, Florida in November 2010. The volume
has the potential to be useful to a range of researchers, from
established veterans in curriculum research to new researchers in
this area of mathematics education. The chapters can be used to
generate conversation about researching the enacted mathematics
curriculum, including similarities and differences in the variables
that can and should be studied across various curricula. As such,
it might be used by a curriculum project team as it outlines a
research agenda for curriculum or program evaluation. It might also
be used as a text in a university graduate course on curriculum
research and design. The chapters in this volume are a natural
complement to those in Approaches to Studying the Enacted
Mathematics Curriculum (Heck, Chval, Weiss, & Ziebarth, 2012),
also published by Information Age Publishing. While the present
volume focuses on a range of issues related to researching the
enacted mathematics curriculum, including theoretical and
conceptual issues, the volume by Heck et al. provides insights into
different instrumentations used by groups of researchers to study
curriculum enactment.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, Iowa State University This volume contains papers
from the Second International Curriculum Conference sponsored by
the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum (CSMC). The
intended audience includes policy makers, curriculum developers,
researchers, teachers, teacher trainers, and anyone else interested
in school mathematics curricula.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, University of Mississippi This volume contains the
proceedings of the First International Curriculum Conference
sponsored by the Center for the Study of Mathematics Curriculum
(CSMC). The CSMC is one of the National Science Foundation Centers
for Learning and Teaching (Award No. ESI-0333879). The
countries-China, Japan, Korea, and Singapore (in alphabetical
order, which also happens to be the order of their
populations)-have each been in the news because of their
performance on international tests and/or their economic
performance and potential. They also have centralized education
ministries that create a single mathematics curriculum framework
followed in the entire country.
A volume in Research in Mathematics Education Series Editor Barbara
J. Dougherty, University of Mississippi This monograph reports on
an analysis of a small part of the mathematics curriculum, the
definitions given to quadrilaterals. This kind of research, which
we call micro-curricular analysis, is often undertaken by those who
create curriculum, but it is not usually done systematically and it
is rarely published. Many terms in mathematics education can be
found to have different definitions in mathematics books. Among
these are ""natural number,"" ""parallel lines"" and ""congruent
triangles,"" ""trapezoid"" and ""isosceles trapezoid,"" the formal
definitions of the trigonometric functions and absolute value, and
implicit definitions of the arithmetic operations addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and division. Yet many teachers and
students do not realize there is a choice of definitions for
mathematical terms. And even those who realize there is a choice
may not know who decides which definition of any mathematical term
is better, and under what criteria. Finally, rarely are the
mathematical implications of various choices discussed. As a
result, many students misuse and otherwise do not understand the
role of definition in mathematics. We have chosen in this monograph
to examine a bit of mathematics for its definitions: the
quadrilaterals. We do so because there is some disagreement in the
definitions and, consequently, in the ways in which quadrilaterals
are classified and relate to each other. The issues underlying
these differences have engaged students, teachers, mathematics
educators, and mathematicians. There have been several articles and
a number of essays on the definitions and classification of
quadrilaterals. But primarily we chose this specific area of
definition in mathematics because it demonstrates how broad
mathematical issues revolving around definitions become reflected
in curricular materials. While we were undertaking this research,
we found that the area of quadrilaterals supplied grist for broader
and richer discussions than we had first anticipated. The intended
audience includes curriculum developers, researchers, teachers,
teacher trainers, and anyone interested in language and its use.
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